Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson in Saving Mr. Banks |
The collaboration is an uphill battle for Disney, DaGradi (Bradley Whitford) and the Shermans (Jason Schwartzman and B.J. Novak), until he discovers what the script’s cross-cutting between past and present has been showing us all along: that her book, about a London family that hires a stern but magical nanny to take care of its children, is actually an enchanted transformation of her own childhood circumstances, living in Australian farm country, and that she created Mary Poppins to accomplish what her family’s efficient, no-nonsense nanny (Rachel Griffiths) was unable to – save her alcoholic, ne’er-do-well banker father, Travis Goff (Colin Farrell), whose name she later appropriated. The novel Mary Poppins, whose charm is undiminished more than three-quarters of a century after it was written, focuses entirely on the adventures the title character leads Jane and Michael Banks on; the story of the inaccessible workaholic papa, George Banks, whom she needs to rescue (by bringing him closer to his kids and helping him to rearrange his priorities) is entirely an invention of the Disney musical. In Saving Mr. Banks, the more the script deals with the metamorphosis of the father, the more the project engages Pamela Travers.
Coral Browne in Dreamchild |
The flashback scenes, with the serious-faced young actress Annie Rose Buckley as the child – known as Ginty – who would grow into Travers, are fairly effective, and Farrell turns in a solid performance as the charming failure Goff, whom Ginty loves desperately but whose drunken unreliability has caused him to lose one job and forced the family to relocate in the remotest part of Australia reachable by railway. It’s in the Hollywood scenes that the movie falters, despite the best efforts of the hard-working actors. The problem is in both the writing and John Lee Hancock’s direction, which keep the story soft and cozy, safely within the Disney purview. Disney, of course, produced the picture. Tom Hanks makes a noble stab at playing Disney, and he’s not a bad casting choice, but the character as written is a warm, wise, benevolent, avuncular fellow; he could have been dreamed up by the studio’s publicity department. His obstinacy about getting hold of Mary Poppins comes out of his love of the material and a vow he made years ago to his daughters to make a movie of it, not commercial shrewdness or an unwillingness to abandon the quest to get whatever he wants because no one says no to Walt Disney. The only wrinkle in his personality is his smoking (which the movie could hardly have omitted, since it eventually killed him), and he’s apologetic about that. So Pamela’s implacability in the face of his enthusiasm and generosity has to be psychologically motivated, and she’s so curmudgeonly that, the way the picture is constructed, you lose patience with her. Even the California landscape and the sunshine are lost on her. Emma Thompson is the ideal choice for Travers, but she’s stuck playing her like a female Lionel Barrymore who ruins everyone’s day until Disney can work out how to get under her leathery skin. Evidently Travers really was impossible during the negotiations about the screenplay; behind the end credits we get to hear portions of the reel-to-reel tape of her meetings with DaGradi and the Shermans, and her immovability about the smallest items (like the type of measuring stick Mary Poppins uses on the Banks children) makes you chuckle in amazement. But whereas in Dreamchild Coral Browne showed us the terror (of death and of the painful memories she’d buried for so long) underneath Mrs. Hargreaves’s steely resolve, the script doesn’t give Thompson the chance to build that kind of complex character. Instead what she gets are soft-sell episodes in which some fuzzy detail penetrates Pamela’s wall of resistance, like the Shermans’ writing “Let’s Go Fly a Kite” for Mr. Banks to sing to Jane and Michael – she gets so caught up in the swing of the tune that she dances around the room – or her learning that the daughter of her kind, patient driver (Paul Giamatti, in a dreadful role) suffers from polio.
B.J. Novak & Jason Schwartzman |
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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